manipulate the real-time attributes of a process NAME chrt - manipulate the real-time attributes of a process SYNOPSIS chrt [options] priority comma......owned by the users daemon and root: renice +1 987 -u daemon root -p 32 SEE ALSO nice (1), chrt (1), getpriority (2), setpriority (2), credentials (7), sched (7) REPORTING BUGS F…...r () does not conform to this requirement, since it always returns 0 on success. SEE ALSO chrt (1), nice (2), sched_get_priority_max (2), sched_get_priority_min (2), sched_getaf…...r () does not conform to this requirement, since it always returns 0 on success. SEE ALSO chrt (1), nice (2), sched_get_priority_max (2), sched_get_priority_min (2), sched_getaf…...s NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. SEE ALSO chrt (1), nice (1), renice (1), sched_getaffinity (2), sched_setaffinity (2) See sched …...he in-kernel sched_attr structure was larger than the size passed by user space. SEE ALSO chrt (1), nice (2), sched_get_priority_max (2), sched_get_priority_min (2), sched_getaf…...he in-kernel sched_attr structure was larger than the size passed by user space. SEE ALSO chrt (1), nice (2), sched_get_priority_max (2), sched_get_priority_min (2), sched_getaf…overview of CPU scheduling NAME sched - overview of CPU scheduling DESCRIPTION Since Linux 2.6.23, the default scheduler is CFS, the "Completely Fair Scheduler". The CFS scheduler …